Script Pebo 7 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, packaging, posters, social media, playful, friendly, retro, whimsical, casual, handmade warmth, display impact, casual branding, retro charm, rounded, bouncy, brushy, chunky, soft terminals.
A chunky handwritten script with rounded, ink-heavy strokes and softly blunted terminals. Letterforms are mostly upright with a lively, bouncy baseline and noticeable variation in stroke thickness that mimics pressure from a marker or brush. Curves are generous and bulbous, counters are compact, and joins in the lowercase often connect smoothly, while capitals lean toward simplified, monoline-like blocky shapes that still share the same soft, hand-drawn finish. Spacing is relatively open for a script, helping the dense strokes stay legible in short phrases and display sizes.
Best suited to headlines, logos/wordmarks, packaging, and promotional graphics where a friendly handmade voice is desired. It performs well in short-to-medium display text such as posters, menus, greeting-style designs, and social media graphics; for longer passages, the heavy strokes and animated rhythm may feel busy at smaller sizes.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, handmade charm. Its rounded forms and buoyant rhythm evoke a retro-casual feel—cheerful rather than formal—making text feel personable and inviting.
The design appears aimed at delivering a bold, handcrafted script look that reads quickly while still feeling personal. By combining simplified, sturdy capitals with more flowing lowercase connections, it balances decorative script flavor with practical display legibility.
Uppercase and lowercase have intentionally different personalities: caps read more like bold, rounded print forms, while the lowercase carries the more flowing script behavior. Distinctive looped descenders (notably in letters like g and y) and a prominent, rounded i/j dot add to the informal character and provide recognizable word shapes in headlines.